Evelys said:
Like I said in my post, you"re far more likely to hit affluent customers on news talk radio and sports radio. Listeners of both trend older, are more likely to own a home, and have disposable income, and are far more likely to work in a professional setting, which makes them more likely to have your target or better income. Those two types of radio and top 40 are the most likely to be on at a work place, and top 40 gets too many younger listeners to be as finely targeted as the other two types.
It"s a pretty low risk shot, I"d imagine.
Good call. I talked to a landscaping owner in another town (who fills exactly the same nitch we do) who said advertising on NPR and conservative talk shows is bringing him great results. He made a comment that $200 a week on radio is yielding him 2-3 calls a day directly from radio, and about $750 a day in approved bids. If I can raise $750 a day, that"s an extra $15k a month in sales, which would put us at our pre-recession numbers, and make me have to hire another two guys.
I just called and emailed NPR, and they are working on a proposal. The good thing about radio is that I can turn it off at anytime. If it doesn"t work, I can yank it, there isn"t much risk. Yellow pages is a one-year commitment. I"ll try the conservative radio shows tomorrow.
From what I"m told, the disposable income of both of these two groups is higher than average, and honestly, thats our target demo. From what my acquaintance said, they"ve been able to track calls directly to each radio station, so there is some accountability. Nothing is worse than spending money on all those ad dollars, and only having some of it work.
The most famous marketing saying is, "Half my advertising works, the problem is, I can"t figure out which half."
What was even more shocking is the he talked about how he spent $2k a month in the Winter to stay busy. He said other guys in his town in the Winter are losing money hand over fist (us included), but by increasing his regular radio budget by 250% in the slower months, his guys worked every day they wanted to (some days it was too cold).